Theology Matters

Posted: Thursday, December 1, 2016

On the church and culture front, it's an old story: Mainline churches in the U.S. and Canada are in decline, evangelical and charismatic churches are on the rise.

On face value, it would be easy to the see the demarcation along stylistic lines. Mainline churches tend to be more traditional in style; evangelical and charismatic churches more contemporary. Yet there are enough exceptions to this rule to prevent it from being the sole – if not leading – factor.

A new study now confirms this thesis. Researchers from Wilfrid Laurier University and Redeemer University College in Ontario, Canada, have concluded that the reason some churches decline while others grow is largely based on their theological beliefs. If the members of a church and its clergy embrace conservative theological beliefs, they tend to be growing. If they don't, they tend to be in decline.

"The riddle of mainline death has been solved," said David M. Haskell of Wilfrid Laurier University.

Of equal interest is how the declining churches self-identify the cause of their decline. Members and clergy of declining churches blame changes in society leading to dropped interest in religion.

The reality is that growing churches hold more firmly to traditional Christian beliefs and are more diligent in such things as prayer and Bible reading. They tend to take the Bible at face value as truth, and believe that God is alive and active in the world.

How foundational is this divide?

Consider this:

93 percent of pastors in growing churches said they agree with the statement: "Jesus rose from the dead with a real, flesh-and-blood body, leaving behind an empty tomb."

In declining churches?

Only 56 percent.

Many would say: "My goodness! If you don't believe that, what kind of Christianity are you espousing?"

Certainly not something that is arresting the attention of the world.

And that is the point. If we water down our faith in order to have it match the world's values and ideals, then we end up having nothing to offer the world that it does not already have.

What is most compelling in a post-Christian world is not a playback of its already existing perspectives. No, the voice that will arrest the attention of the world will be convictional in nature, clear in its message, substantive in its content and bold in its challenge.

In other words, Christianity as presented by Christ Himself.

So let's make sure this isn't missed.

Mainline churches are in decline, and have been for many decades.

Conservative churches are growing.

"The strength of our study is we actually now can explain it," Haskell concludes,